❌

Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Beyond kingdoms and empires

"Now, it is surely true that in any period of human history, there will always be those who feel most comfortable in ranks and orders. As Γ‰tienne de La BoΓ©tie had already pointed out in the 16th century, the source of 'voluntary servitude' is arguably the most important political question of them all. But where do the statistics come from, to support such grand claims? Are they reliable? Venture down into the footnotes, and you discover that everyone is citing the same source..." David Wengrow (who you may remember from this brief pamphlet he coauthored) on where we get the idea that most people have lived within empires (Aeon).

Federal Standard 595

In these few short years, America's newly opening landscapesβ€”residential, rural, and the fastest routes between themβ€”were given a visual identity by the federal government. If olive drab and its ilk were the colors of Tom Brokaw's Greatest Generation, then the hues of the first revision were those of America's well-branded internal expansion. Every mailbox, park sign, and highway mile-marker was another tiny flag planted by a growing nation, proclaiming its new success with the same methods and military sensibility that had recently secured it a starring role on the international stage. Though they're brighter and friendlier, the colors and rules that dictated the look of American infrastructure's mid-century boom are every bit as ordered as a dispatch from the Quartermaster Corps. from Americhrome [The Morning News]

AMS Standard 595
❌